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JOURNALS // Regular and Chaotic Dynamics // Archive

Regul. Chaotic Dyn., 2016 Volume 21, Issue 7-8, Pages 902–917 (Mi rcd235)

This article is cited in 8 papers

A Coin Vibrational Motor Swimming at Low Reynolds Number

Alice C. Quillena, Hesam Askaria, Douglas H. Kelleya, Tamar Friedmannab, Patrick W. Oakesa

a University of Rochester, Rochester, NY, 14627, USA
b Dept. of Mathematics and Statistics, Smith College, Northampton, MA, 01063, USA

Abstract: Low-cost coin vibrational motors, used in haptic feedback, exhibit rotational internal motion inside a rigid case. Because the motor case motion exhibits rotational symmetry, when placed into a fluid such as glycerin, the motor does not swim even though its oscillatory motions induce steady streaming in the fluid. However, a piece of rubber foam stuck to the curved case and giving the motor neutral buoyancy also breaks the rotational symmetry allowing it to swim. We measured a 1 cm diameter coin vibrational motor swimming in glycerin at a speed of a body length in 3 seconds or at 3 mm/s. The swim speed puts the vibrational motor in a low Reynolds number regime similar to bacterial motility, but because of the oscillations of the motor it is not analogous to biological organisms. Rather the swimming vibrational motor may inspire small inexpensive robotic swimmers that are robust as they contain no external moving parts. A time dependent Stokes equation planar sheet model suggests that the swim speed depends on a steady streaming velocity $V_{stream} \sim Re_s^{1/2} U_0$ where $U_0$ is the velocity of surface oscillations, and streaming Reynolds number $Re_s = U_0^2/(\omega \nu)$ for motor angular frequency $\omega$ and fluid kinematic viscosity $\nu$.

Keywords: swimming models, hydrodynamics, nonstationary 3-D Stokes equation, bio-inspired micro-swimming devices.

MSC: 76D07, 76D99, 76Z99, 74F99, 74L99, 74H99, 70B15, 68T40, 35Q99

Received: 30.08.2016
Accepted: 10.12.2016

Language: English

DOI: 10.1134/S1560354716070121



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